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Meter:7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6
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Charles Vincent

1852 - 1934 Person Name: C. Vincent, 1852-1934 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "ST. DOROTHEA" in The Methodist Hymn-Book with Tunes Vincent, Charles; b. 9-19-1852, Houghton-le-Spring, Durham, d. 2-28-34, Monte Carlo; English organist. Full name Charles John Vincent, Jr.

Sylvester Main

1817 - 1873 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "DYING LOVE" Died: October 5, 1873. Main, a singing school teacher, partnered with Lucius Biglow to take over William Bradbury’s business in 1867, forming the well known Biglow & Main publishing house. His son was Hubert Main. "Among the playmates who used to gather on the village green was Sylvester Main, who was two or three years older than I. He was a prime favorite with the gentler sex, for he used to protect us from the annoyances of more mischievous boys. In the autumn of 1834 mother and I left Ridgefield and went to live again in Westchester County; and I then bade my friend, Sylvester, adieu. Not until thirty years later did we meet again, this time, strangely enough, in the office of William B. Bradbury with whom he was afterwards a business partner; and from 1864 to the time of his death in 1873 we worked together constantly." Crosby, p. 8 Main’s works include: Cottage Melodies, with William Bradbury (New York: Carlton & Porter, 1859) Hallowed Songs/, with Philip Phillips & Theodore Perkins (New York: Carlton & Porter, 1865) Sources Jones, pp. 13, 89 http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/m/a/i/main_s.htm ===================== The Main of Biglow and Main was Sylvester Main, born in Ridgefield in 1817 and a childhood friend of Fanny Crosby. He became a singing-school teacher and wound up in New York City, compiling books of hymn music. He went to work for William Bradbury, music publisher and hymnist, and when Bradbury died around 1868, Biglow and Main partnered to take over the firm. http://www.theridgefieldpress.com/33332/about-town-sacred-music/

Malcolm Williamson

1931 - 2003 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "OBEDIENCE (Williamson)"

William H. Oakley

Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "PENITENCE (Oakley)"

Herbert Sanders

1878 - 1938 Person Name: Dr. Herbert Sanders, 1879- Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "SYRIAN STARS"

James P. Carrell

1787 - 1854 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "BROOMSGROVE (Carrell)" James P. Carrell was a "farmer, Methodist minister, and county clerk in Lebanon, Russell County, Virginia. He was author of the Songs of Zion (1821) and co-author of Virginia Harmony (1831)" (Steel and Hulan 2010). Several of his songs were printed in Kentucky Harmony and its supplements.

P. R. Maclagan

Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "SUPPLICATION (Maclagan)"

James Relly

1722 - 1778 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Author of "Salvation of God" James Relly was born about 1722 at Jeffreston, Pembrokeshire, Wales, and died in 1778. He was converted to Christianity during the Great Awakening ushered in by George Whitefield. He worked under George Whitefield as a Calvinistic Methodist preacher and missionary. However, Whitefield and Relly separated ways over Relly's seemingly universalist teaching that all humanity was elect (i.e. saved) when Christ took the punishment for all sin when he died. He also departed from both the Calvinists and Methodists by taking the doctrine of Justification further, in teaching that believers no longer sin and the Law's sole purpose is to condemn humanity and point them to Christ. He was the mentor of John Murray, the founder of the Universalist Church of America. Relly along with his brother John wrote Christian Hymns, Poems and Spiritual Songs in 1758, which John Murray had republished in America in 1776. Dianne Shapiro; from an article by Alexander Gordon in Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, vol. 48; Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography; and Disoriented. Reoriented. blog (https://disorientedtheology.wordpress.com/2013/08/29/all-shall-be-well-chapter-6-james-relly/)

Agnes Bulmer

1775 - 1837 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Author of "Laying the Foundation" Bulmer, Agnes, née Collinson, third daughter of Edward Collinson, born in Lombard Street, London, Aug. 31, 1775, and married in 1793 to Mr. Joseph Buhner. Her husband's death took place in 1828, and hers on the 30th Aug., 1837. She published in 1836, Memoirs of Mrs. Mortimer; in 1833, Messiah's Kingdom, a poem in 12 books; in addition to articled contributed to the Youth's Instructor, &c. Her Scripture Histories appeared posthumously in 1837-8, and her Select Letters were published in 1842, with an introduction and notes, by the Rev. W. M. Bunting; and her Memoir in 1837 by her sister. Mrs. Bulmer was a member of the Wesleyan Society. Her best known hymn, "Thou who hast in Zion laid," was written for the laying of the foundation stone of the Oxford Road Wesleyan Chapel, Manchester, July 11, 1825, and included in the Supplement to the Wesleyan Hymn Book, 1830, No. 737. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

L. Meadows White

1860 - 1950 Person Name: L. M. White, 1860-1950 Meter: 7.6.7.6.7.8.7.6 Composer of "GERSAU" in Singing the Faith

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